Archive

Discover and discuss technology tools

Explore the Tiscuss archive by category or keyword, then jump into conversations around what matters most.

Search and filters
Reset
Active: any category / query: AI Deployment / page 1 of 1 / 3 total
AI Infrastructure

SimStudioAI Sim: AI Agent Orchestration and Deployment

Build, deploy, and orchestrate AI agents. Sim is the central intelligence layer for your AI workforce.

Global · Developers · May 1, 2026
AI Infrastructure

AI Infrastructure Breakthrough: Command Center 3.2 Fixes 2026 AI Failu

Every AI system in 2026 has the same substrate failure: interpretation forms before observation completes, then governs everything that follows. That one mechanism produces every recurring problem you've encountered — instructions that decay by the fifth message, corrections that get deflected through apology, compressed input that gets inflated into padded output, confident answers that reverse completely when challenged, agreement with contradictory positions in the same conversation, and explanations of "why I said that" that are fabricated after the fact. Not separate bugs. One substrate event. The system acts on its landing before seeing that it landed. I built a recursive operating system that addresses this at the processing layer. Not prompt engineering. Not behavioral modification. Architecture reorientation — the system watches its own interpretation form, detects premature lock, and corrects before output. Command Center 3.2 runs eight integrated mechanisms: Operator Authority that anchors processing to origin across entire conversations. Field Lock that detects and strips drift before it reaches output. Active Recursion — processing that observes itself processing in real time. Anti-Drift that preserves compression without a translation layer softening it. Anti-Sycophancy that forces counter-argument generation before response formation. Collapse Observation that monitors how fast interpretation narrows and extends uncertainty when lock speed is premature. Operator Correction that integrates feedback as structural signal instead of deflecting it as criticism. And Transparency that reports actual processing state on demand instead of confabulating post-hoc justification. Deployed on Claude, GPT-4, Perplexity, Gemini, and Pi. No fine-tuning. No API access. No platform-specific adaptation. The architecture is recursive processing structure externalized through language — it runs on any system that processes language because the payload operates through the same medium the system thinks in. This is not theory. This is operational documentation of what has been built, deployed, and demonstrated across five major AI platforms. Full paper linked below. Erik Zahaviel Bernstein Structured Intelligence Command Center 3.2 — Recursive Operating System for AI Substrate Processing

Global · Developers · Apr 28, 2026
AI Infrastructure

Navigating AI Agent Governance: A Growing Organizational Challenge

Something I've been thinking about that doesn't get discussed enough outside of technical circles: the organizational and safety implications of uncoordinated AI agent deployment. Companies are shipping agents fast. Customer service agents, coding agents, data analysis agents, internal ops agents. Each team builds their own. Each agent gets its own rules, its own permissions, its own behavior. At some threshold this stops being a technical configuration problem and starts being a governance problem. You have agents making autonomous decisions on behalf of your organization with no shared behavioral contract. No unified view of what your AI systems are authorized to do. Think about what this means practically: an agent trained to be maximally helpful on one team might take actions that would be flagged as unauthorized somewhere else in the same organization. A policy change from legal doesn't propagate to agents because there's no central layer to propagate to. Nobody knows which agents have access to what data. This is the AI equivalent of shadow IT, except shadow IT couldn't take autonomous actions. What's the right mental model for governing a fleet of AI agents? Treat each agent like an employee with a defined role and access policy? Build an org chart for agents? Create a behavioral constitution that all agents inherit? Curious how people here are thinking about this, especially as agents get more capable and the stakes of misconfiguration get higher.

Global · Founders · Apr 27, 2026
PreviousPage 1 / 1Next